40 research outputs found
Tracing CP-violation in Lepton Flavor Violating Muon Decays
Although the Lepton Flavor Violating (LFV) decay is
forbidden in the Standard Model (SM), it can take place within various theories
beyond the SM. If the branching ratio of this decay saturates its present bound
[{\it i.e.,} Br], the forthcoming
experiments can measure the branching ratio with high precision and
consequently yield information on the sources of LFV. In this letter, we show
that for polarized , by studying the angular distribution of the
transversely polarized positron and linearly polarized photon we can derive
information on the CP-violating sources beyond those in the SM. We also study
the angular distribution of the final particles in the decay where is defined to be the more energetic positron. We show
that transversely polarized can provide information on a certain
combination of the CP-violating phases of the underlying theory which would be
lost by averaging over the spin of .Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Strange quark mass from Finite Energy QCD sum rules to five loops
The strange quark mass is determined from a new QCD Finite Energy Sum Rule
(FESR) optimized to reduce considerably the systematic uncertainties arising
from the hadronic resonance sector. As a result, the main uncertainty in this
determination is due to the value of . The correlator of
axial-vector divergences is used in perturbative QCD to five-loop order,
including quark and gluon condensate contributions, in the framework of both
Fixed Order (FOPT), and Contour Improved Perturbation Theory (CIPT). The latter
exhibits very good convergence, leading to a remarkably stable result in the
very wide range , where is the radius of the
integration contour in the complex energy (squared) plane. The value of the
strange quark mass in this framework at a scale of 2 GeV is for , respectively.Comment: Additional comments added at the end of the Conclusions, and one
extra reference is given. A note added in proof uses the most recent
determination of Lambda_QCD from ALEPH to narrow down the predictio
The Little Hierarchy in Universal Extra Dimensions
In the standard model in universal extra dimensions (UED) the mass of the
Higgs field is driven to the cutoff of the higher-dimensional theory. This
re-introduces a small hierarchy since the compactification scale 1/R should not
be smaller than the weak scale. In this paper we study possible solutions to
this problem by considering five-dimensional theories where the Higgs field
potential vanishes at tree level due to a global symmetry. We consider two
avenues: a Little Higgs model and a Twin Higgs model. An obstacle for the
embedding of these four-dimensional models in five dimensions is that their
logarithmic sensitivity to the cutoff will result in linear divergences in the
higher dimensional theory. We show that, despite the increased cutoff
sensitivity of higher dimensional theories, it is possible to control the Higgs
mass in these two scenarios. For the Little Higgs model studied, the
phenomenology will be significantly different from the case of the standard
model in UED. This is due to the fact that the compactification scale
approximately coincides with the scale where the masses of the new states
appear. For the case of the Twin Higgs model, the compactification scale may be
considerably lower than the scale where the new states appear. If it is as low
as allowed by current limits, it would be possible to experimentally observe
the standard model Kaluza-Klein states as well as a new heavy quark. On the
other hand, if the compactification scale is higher, then the phenomenology at
colliders would coincide with the one for the standard model in UED.Comment: 25 pages, 2 figure
Aspects of Axion Phenomenology in a slice of AdS_5
Motivated by multi-throat considerations, we study the phenomenological
implications of a bulk axion in a slice of AdS_5 with a large extra dimension:
k~0.01 eV, kR > 1. In particular, we compare axion physics with a warped
geometry to axions in flat compactifications. As in flat compactification
scenarios, we find that the mass of the axion can become independent from the
underlying Peccei-Quinn scale. Surprisingly, we find that in warped extra
dimensions the axion's invisibility, cosmological viability, and basic
phenomenology remain essentially unaltered in comparison to axions in flat
compactifications.Comment: 25 pages, 9 figure
A Window on the CP-violating Phases of MSSM from Lepton Flavor Violating Processes
It has recently been shown that by measuring the transverse polarization of
the final particles in the LFV processes , and
, one can derive information on the CP-violating phases of the
underlying theory. We derive formulas for the transverse polarization of the
final particles in terms of the couplings of the effective potential leading to
these processes. We then study the dependence of the polarizations of and
in the and on the parameters of the
Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM). We show that combining the
information on various observables in the and
search experiments with the information on the electric dipole moment of the
electron can help us to solve the degeneracies in parameter space and to
determine the values of certain phases.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figure
Soft SUSY breaking contributions to proton decay
We show that in supersymmetric grand unified theories new effective D=4 and
D=5 operators for proton decay are induced by soft SUSY-breaking terms, when
heavy GUT gauge bosons are integrated out, in addition to the standard D=6
ones. As a result, the proton lifetime in gauge mediated channels can be
enhanced or even suppressed depending on the size of the heavy Higgses soft
terms.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures, LaTeX, JHEP3 class, axodra
Challenging SO(10) SUSY GUTs with family symmetries through FCNC processes
We perform a detailed analysis of the SO(10) SUSY GUT model with D3 family
symmetry of Dermisek and Raby (DR). The model is specified in terms of 24
parameters and predicts, as a function of them, the whole MSSM set of
parameters at low energy scales. Concerning the SM subset of such parameters,
the model is able to give a satisfactory description of the quark and lepton
masses, of the PMNS matrix and of the CKM matrix. We perform a global fit to
the model, including flavour changing neutral current (FCNC) processes Bs -->
mu+ mu-, B --> Xs gamma, B --> Xs l+ l- and the B(d,s) - bar B(d,s) mass
differences Delta M(d,s) as well as the flavour changing (FC) process B+ -->
tau+ nu. These observables provide at present the most sensitive probe of the
SUSY mass spectrum and couplings predicted by the model. Our analysis
demonstrates that the simultaneous description of the FC observables in
question represents a serious challenge for the DR model, unless the masses of
the scalars are moved to regions which are problematic from the point of view
of naturalness and probably beyond the reach of the LHC. We emphasize that this
problem could be a general feature of SUSY GUT models with third generation
Yukawa unification and weak-scale minimal flavour violation.Comment: 1 + 37 pages, 5 figures, 11 tables. v3: minor typos fixed. Matches
JHEP published versio
Footprints of the Beyond in flavor physics: Possible role of the Top Two Higgs Doublet Model
The B-factories results provide an impressive confirmation of the Standard
Model (SM) description of flavor and CP violation. Nevertheless, as more data
were accumulated, deviations in the 2.5-3.5 sigma range have emerged pointing
to the exciting possibility of new CP-odd phase(s) and flavor violating
parameters in B-decays. Primarily this seems to be the case in the time
dependent CP asymmetries in penguin dominated modes (e.g. B -> phi (eta') Ks).
We discuss these and other deviations from the SM and, as an illustration of
possible new physics scenarios, we examine the role of the Top Two Higgs
Doublet Model. This is a simple extension of the SM obtained by adding second
Higgs doublet in which the Yukawa interactions of the two Higgs doublets are
assigned in order to naturally account for the large top-quark mass.
Of course, many other extensions of the Standard Model could also account for
these experimental deviations. Clearly if one takes these deviations seriously
then some new particles in the 300 GeV to few TeV with associated new CP-odd
phase(s) are needed.Comment: 40 pages, 17 figures (png format), uses pdflate
Flavor Changing Neutral Currents involving Heavy Quarks with Four Generations
We study various FCNC involving heavy quarks in the Standard Model (SM) with
a sequential fourth generation. After imposing , and constraints, we find can be enhanced by an order of magnitude to ,
while decays can reach , which are orders of magnitude
higher than in SM. However,these rates are still not observable for the near
future.With the era of LHC approaching, we focus on FCNC decays involving
fourth generation and quarks. We calculate the rates for
loop induced FCNC decays , as well as
t^\prime\to tZ,\tH, tg, t\gamma. If is of order , tree level decay would dominate, posing a challenge
since -tagging is less effective. For ,
would tend to dominate, while could also open for heavier
, leading to thepossibility of quadruple- signals via . The FCNC decays could still dominate if
is just above 200 GeV. For the case of , ingeneral would be dominant, hence it behaves like a heavy top. For both and
, except for the intriguing light case, FCNC decays are in the
range, and are quite detectable at the LHC.For a possible
future ILC, we find the associated production of FCNC ,
are below sensitivity, while
and can be better probed.Tevatron Run-II can still probe the
lighter or scenario. LHC would either discover the fourth generation
and measure the FCNC rates, or rule out the fourth generation conclusively.Comment: 31 pages, 15 eps figures, version to appear in JHE
Large extra dimension effects in Higgs boson production at linear colliders and Higgs factories
In the framework of quantum gravity propagating in large extra dimensions,
the effects of virtual Kaluza-Klein graviton and graviscalar interference with
Higgs boson production amplitudes are computed at linear colliders and Higgs
factories. The interference of the almost-continuous spectrum of the KK
gravitons with the standard model resonant amplitude is finite and predictable
in terms of the fundamental D-dimensional Plank scale M_D and the number of
extra dimensions \delta. We find that, for M_D ~ 1 TeV and \delta=2, effects of
the order of a few percent could be detected for heavy Higgs bosons (m_H>500
GeV) in Higgs production both via WW fusion in e^+e^- colliders and at
\mu^+\mu^- Higgs-boson factories.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures ; a few comments and references added ; version
to appear in JHE
